Doomsday Deserted Fear

Album info

Album-Release:
2022

HRA-Release:
04.03.2022

Label: Century Media

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Metal

Artist: Deserted Fear

Album including Album cover

I`m sorry!

Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,

due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.

We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO

  • 1Intro01:22
  • 2Part of the End05:46
  • 3Idols of Triumph03:15
  • 4Follow the Light That Blinds03:45
  • 5Fall from Grace04:11
  • 6At Its End00:43
  • 7Reborn Paradise04:58
  • 8The One Desire04:27
  • 9Call of Emptiness03:31
  • 10Voices of Fire04:15
  • 11Doomsday05:09
  • Total Runtime41:22

Info for Doomsday



Thuringian melodic death metal trio Deserted Fear will release their brand-new full-length record Doomsday on March 4th 2022. Fans of the previous release Drowned By Humanity, which conquered the Top 20 of the official German album charts, may rightly expect the desired melodic death metal inferno we know from Deserted Fear.

"The tranquil town of Eisenberg is located in the Saale-Holzland district in Thuringia, about halfway between Jena and Gera. For us, the small town with 10,000 inhabitants is relevant above all because one of the most important German melodic death metal acts currently comes from here. After "Dead shores rising" sold well in 2017, the guys cracked the top 20 of the longplay charts for the first time two years later with their fourth studio album "Drowned by humanity". Listening to the band's new smash hit, there's no doubt that it's likely to climb even higher. After the cinematic-bombastic sounding "Intro", it goes straight into full swing with "Part of the end". What a hurricane of a song - mighty, unstoppable and all thrilling. The following highlights are the beefy grooving "Idols of triumph", the hard, yet amazingly epic "Reborn paradise", the sometimes thrashy, then gothic or doom-inspired "Call of emptiness" and the mighty title track, which brings the album to an impressively virtuoso conclusion." (Oliver Kube, EMP Redaktion)

Manuel “Mahne” Glatter, vocals, guitar
Fabian Hildebrandt, guitar
Simon Mengs, drums



Deserted Fear
Back in 2012, a trio of young decendants out of Eisenberg (fondly called “Iron Hill”) were ready to bow to their ancestors of the death metal old school, whilst letting them know the meaning of innovation. Having shaken the dust out of conventional sound scapes, in a shower of groove grenades came the ferocious death metal hymns that bred their debut album “My Empire”.

DESERTED FEAR had arrived. The response was overwhelming. The metal media spoke of ‘riff massacres’, instantly seeing that Deserted Fear would ‘catapult themselves to the top of the death metal scene’. Comparisons to bands like Death, Asphyx, Bolt Thrower, Dismember and Obituary, heavy praise indeed. Meantime, they headlined countless shows, touring also with Morbid Angel & Morgoth and played the biggest metal festivals in Germany like Party.San, Full Force and Summer Breeze Open Air. The band’s second, no less destructive record, “Kingdom Of Worms” was another bloodcurdling journey through rousing chaotic melodies, superior blast thrills and gnarly, growlingly massive hooklines. But now that the party is over; let the parade begin!

On “Dead Shores Rising”, Deserted Fear play all the aces. The artwork illustrates their heroic skeletal talisman, standing at the bottom of a battlefield. Thoughtfully he looks out on the waves of the ocean, as at his back, a fortress fire rages. In search of wisdom, he’s on his way to conquer new frontiers. And for Deserted Fear, there could be no better metaphor. To flee paralleled monotony, Manuel Glatter (guitar, vocals) and Fabian Hildebrandt (guitar) left their hometown of Eisenberg to relocate to Jena. Situated at the edge of Thuringia’s rangy forests and lonely graveyards, they moved in next-door to one another. Unimpressed by the outerworld they threaded wires through the walls and built a new home studio. Equally, to pastueres new, “Dead Shores Rising” so headed.Little wonder its lyrics epicenter on wanderlust. And where heavyduty solo guitars rain down on the insane pounding of Simon Mengs’ drumming, pulsing death metal forces uniquely fuse with epic vocal fanfares. Once again, it’s all cultured by mixing and mastering guru, Dan Swanö (Edge of Sanity). “Now we know what we want”, pauses Fabian Hildebrandt a moment. “We learned to play what we ever wanted to play yet more and were more self-critical while writing.” Fear not though, Deserted Fear stay sheltered in the deadlocked structures of death metal. But it’s out of self-reflection and not corny bloodthirstiness that they won’t compromise. To bear the downsides of life and find motivation in it, with the enthralling power of melodic guitars they so ornament their cell.

“Collectively and together, that’s all about it”, recognizes Simon Mengs. “One can achieve more with something positive rather than a mood that’s default negative.”

Speaking of signing with Century Media, the ideal label for such artistic freedom, Manuel Glatter honours his heroes.

“Bands like Grave and Asphyx are constantly on a very high level. They’ve managed to stay true to themselves while being with Century Media. Nobody forced them to be different.”

True, Deserted Fear love to be independent. And by their do-it-yourself-attitude, they stand. To them, a band should not be a job.

Artistic freedom is the benchmark of what they do. “With Deserted Fear we never want to experience a situation where we’re under financial pressure,” Glatter concludes. “We’re lucky to have loyal employers that fully understand ourpassion to tour.”

Like their talisman on the dead shore, Deserted Fear eye Europe and the world. Be warned then, their sails are set.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO